Keeping the sun out

Today I made something very boring. I took our old screen door and replaced the screen in it with sun screen to keep those harsh Texas rays out of our house this summer. Our old sliding door had a film on it to block the sun but the new one does not. I find that using a sun screen works better than trying to apply one of those films yourself.

Now, I just need to build the screen frame for the other side of the door and figure out how in the world to attach it…. that should be easy right?

Making the best of crazy Texas weather

When we first moved into our house, it hard a front yard full of lush green grass (St. Augustine for those of you familiar). Needless to say, it didn’t live very long under our care. We tend to feel that grass shouldn’t require two waterings a week in such a drought prone area.

Once the front corner of the yard completely died, we installed a little corner xeriscape garden:

Look at all those tiny little plants!  Well, we chose a rough time to plant this garden as the next spring and summer we experienced an extremely harsh drought. We tried watering the little plants, but quite a few of them didn’t make it.  In this photo, you can see what was left (and how big it got):

With those native plants not surviving, you can imagine how our stupidly thirsty grass fared (especially since we didn’t water it)! The next year even more of our lawn died. I decided it was an excellent time to finish the front yard xeriscape that I had planned all along!

Let me just say, I got us into a lot of work. I always underestimate these things. We pulled out the dead grass / weeds, leaving just the grass under the cedar trees that had managed to survive the summer. Then we edged the area with black landscape edging and laid down weed cloth.  We also collected free rocks from rock and dirt piles at a local cemetery to line my new xeriscape (three loads, in the trunk of our Ford Focus).  We collected plants from the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center fall plant sale and went to town planting them, including the Mexican Plum tree that rode home in the back seat of the convertible with the top down. The craziest plants we bought there were these itty bitty assorted wildflowers.  We planted them thinking they’d get maybe 2 feet tall and the four plants that survived that winter turned into MASSIVE wildflower bushes 4 – 5 feet across and almost as tall!  Of course, they were aided by the fact that the spring and summer after they were planted was incredibly rainy and we lost almost no plants this time. In fact, all of the plants grew way more than we expected, even after reading their descriptions!

Now after a year and a half of the front yard xeriscape awesomeness we created I had to prune some of the massive bushes back so that they don’t look absolutely ridiculous this coming year. These Texas hardy plants all seemed to have survived the four days straight of freezing temperatures without us covering them.  Hooray! Plants I don’t have to water AND I don’t have to cover. WIN WIN.

In addition to planting plants, I like to plant large pretty rocks.

And from today, buds on our Mexican plum tree!

Making our house more grown-up

In the last three months or so we’ve made drastic changes to our house. We’ve turned it from the dwelling of two grad students into real adults!

The list:

  • Replaced all carpet with DIY stained concrete floors (that’s a post for another day. It will be LONG).
  • Painted living room, dining room, hallway, bedroom, and trim
  • Had a sliding glass door replaced
  • New (or new to us in some cases) furniture: coffee table, end table, TV stand, LED TV, two storage ottomans, a couch cover, and a soon to be delivered dresser and nightstand set
  • Pet supplies: 2 cat beds and 2 dog bed covers sewn to match the new color scheme, cat scratching post and shelves mounted to a wall
  • Most importantly, a roomba to drive around and vacuum up all the free-floating pet fur that accumulates without carpet to hold it down!

The start of an exciting project!

I’ve got plans for a natural wood end table that I picked up cheap from craigslist. I’m upcycling! It will be awesome, I promise. So far I’ve sanded it down to remove the coating and stained it darker to try to match the living room. Next up: sealing it. Then, the real exciting part that I can’t share yet. Stay tuned!

Sanded and ready to be stained:

After two coats of stain:

The stain I used is eco-friendly TimberSoy from Eco Safety Products. It’s easy to use and easy to clean up. No harsh chemicals involved!

Also, spoiling cats

Along the lines of my post yesterday about spoiling my dog, I thought I’d share how we spoil our cats.

Recently we renovated our living and dining rooms. In the process we’ve replaced some of our furniture. And now this is what the cats have:

How did we get to this point?

We had a stand-alone cat perch that Mojo loved to play one. It was leopard print colored and didn’t really match the new improved decor.

My husband suggested that we make cat shelves up the wall. Being the sucker I am (and recognizing the chance to get rid of the leopard print) I agreed! And then here’s what you do:

  • Buy some sturdy shelves and brackets at Ikea
  • Cut them to size for cats
  • Wrap a long 1” x 4” board with sisal rope (they love scratching sisal rope!)
  • Attach all to wall at reasonable intervals, all the way up to the vaulted ceiling
  • Sew not one but two cat beds and velcro them to the shelves
  • Feel great satisfaction when you find cats sleeping up there. Ok, so really only Mojo goes up unprompted but if you lure Carston up he’ll lay there. Annie doesn’t go up at all. I blame her lack of claws.